ERMES

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ERMES (European Radio Messaging System or Enhanced Radio Messaging System[1]) was a pan-European radio paging system.

Transmission parameters

In 1990, the European Telecommunications Standard Institute (ETSI) developed the European Telecommunications Standard ETS 300 133 for ERMES operating in the frequency band 169.4125-169.8125 MHz.[2]

Transmission parameters, pager interrogation

  • Each paging transmission is divided into 60 cycles of 1 minute in length.
  • Each cycle is divided into 5 subsequences of 12 seconds.
  • Each subsequence is further divided into 16 batches, labeled A through P.

Pager interrogation

  • The pager population is divided into 16 groups.
  • Each pager group is allocated to one of the 16 transmission batches [A...P].
  • The pager needs only to be active during the period it has been allocated to, allowing it to go into sleep mode 15/16 (~=93%) of the time (a ~7% duty cycle). This scheduling allocation protocol extends the battery life of the pager by several orders of magnitude.

Aims and development

During the 1990s, ERMES aimed to achieve a standardised digital platform throughout Europe.[4][5][6] It was intended that paging systems based on the ERMES standard would be able to receive text messages transmitted from personal computers, enabling companies to contact their employees over the PSTN. Also, GSM handsets would receive ERMES messages on their displays.[7]

ERMES was most widely used in France, where around one million ERMES pagers were in use in 1998.[8] Also in 1998, an ERMES MoU organisation was set up, to lobby for its adoption as the European standard.[9]

Failure

References

Further reading

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